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Do NOT Buy a Samsung

In my long history of buying tech products, I've always kept an open mind about companies. I've always given every company a fair shot at proving itself worthy, trying out every brand imaginable, and given companies that have disappointed me a second shot. I've never told someone not to buy a particular brand.

Do NOT Buy a Samsung

Samsung is a brand unfit of your cash, trust and time. My experiences with its after-sales support, combined with the recklessness that appears to be behind the Galaxy Note 7 debacle, give the overall impression that the company doesn't really care about you. "We don't care if you leave us, millions more people come flocking to us everyday" it seems, they're saying.

Do NOT Buy a Samsung

Case in point, my Samsung laptop recently encountered an audio driver issue which caused it to not play any audio. It has been put into a Samsung service center on two different occasions now, and each time coming back with a more serious issue. The first time, it came back with a Windows that encountered errors left and right, causing it to refuse to install anything from Office to driver updates. The second time, the laptop randomly shuts down, seemingly without cause.

Do NOT Buy a Samsung

I encountered a similar issue with my Galaxy S7 earlier this year: it went into the repair center with water damage (admittedly my fault), came out certified to be once again water-resistant after I footed parts of the bill, only to be proven not so when it died being splashed by water in my pants pocket. The company would go on take well over a month and a half, after multiple visits to their repair center (the company would tell me my phone was OK to pick up and use, only for me to encounter things that weren't fixed within hours of using them: from non-working volume buttons, to broken microphones) and multitudes of calls, to finally fix a Galaxy S7 that should have never died in the first place. This suggests that the company is not really trying to fix your issues, but recklessly playing around and seeing if their fix sticks, breaking five things for every one they fix. It does not value your time or your continued support.

Do NOT Buy a Samsung

The Note 7 debacle seems to back this up. The company rushed a product out to market to beat the iPhone 7, causing to issue a faulty design that made 2.5 million customers vulnerable to fire, rushed its original recall to get the device back up on shelves before too many flocked to Apple, and put even more at risk. It then kept strangely quiet as more fires lit up, seemingly playing a waiting game to see if the fires would fan themselves out, putting even more customers at risk than it already had, taking six days after a fire burst on a Southwest Airlines plane that thankfully was still on the ground, to finally kill a product that should have never made it out of the testing lab, and even if it did, should not have ever been rolled out as "safe" after its first recall.